Syntax to support optional and named keyword arguments.
let-optionals[*] is originally from SCSH, and
let-keywords[*] derived from Gauche.
Binding construct similar to let. The vars are
bound to fresh locations holding values taken in order from the
list ls, body is evaluated in the resulting
environment, and the value(s) of the last expression of body
returned. If the length of ls is shorter than the number of
vars, then the remaining vars taken their values from
their corresponding defaults, evaluated in an unspecified
order. Unused defaults are not evaluated. If a final
rest var is specified, then it is bound to any remaining
elements of ls beyond the length of ls, otherwise any
extra values are unused.
ls is evaluated only once. It is an error if any
default mutates ls.
Typically used on the dotted rest list at the start of a lambda,
let-optionals is more concise and more efficient than
case-lambda for simple optional argument uses.
Example:
(define (copy-port . o)
(let-optionals o ((in (current-input-port))
(out (current-output-port))
(n-bytes #f))
(do ((i 0 (+ i 1))
(n (read-u8 in) (read-u8 in)))
((or (and n-bytes (>= i n-bytes))
(eof-object? b)))
(write-u8 b out)))
Example:
(let-optionals '(0) ((a 10) (b 11) (c 12))
(list a b c))=> (0 11 12)
let* equivalent to let-optionals. Any required
default values are evaluated in left-to-right order, with
all preceding vars in scope.
Shorthand for
(lambda (required ... . o)
(let-optionals o ((var default) ... [rest])
body ...))
Variant of opt-lambda which binds using
let-optionals*.
Shorthand for
(define name (opt-lambda (var default) ... [rest]) body ...)
Shorthand for
(define name (opt-lambda* (var default) ... [rest]) body ...)
Search for the identifier key in the list ls, treating
it as a property list of the form (key1 val1 key2 val2
...), and return the associated val. If not found, return
default, or #f.
Macro equivalent of keyword-ref, where default is
only evaluated if key is not found.
Analogous to let-optionals, except instead of binding the
vars by position they are bound by name, by searching in
ls with keyword-ref*. If an optional keyword
argument is provided it must be an identifier to use as the name,
otherwise var is used, appending a ":" (colon). If the name
is not found, var is bound to default, even if unused
names remain in ls.
Keyword arguments have precedence in CommonLisp, DSSSL, and SRFI 89. However, unlike these systems you cannot mix optional and keyword arguments.
If an optional trailing identifier rest is provided, it is
bound to the list of unused arguments not bound to any var.
This is useful for chaining together keyword argument procedures -
you can extract just the arguments you need and pass on the rest
to another procedure. The rest usage is similar to Python's
**args (again predated by CommonLisp and DSSSL).
Note R7RS does not have a disjoint keyword type or auto-quoting syntax for keywords - they are simply identifiers (though no type checking is performed). Thus when passing keyword arguments they must be quoted (or otherwise dynamically evaluated).
Example:
(define (make-person . o)
(let-keywords o ((name "John Doe")
(age 0)
(occupation job: 'unemployed))
(vector name age occupation)))
(list (make-person)
(make-person 'name: "Methuselah" 'age: 969)
(make-person 'name: "Dr. Who" 'job: 'time-lord 'age: 1500))
ERROR on line 365 of file lib/chibi/doc.scm: immutable binding: make-person
Example:
(let-keywords '(b: 2 a: 1 other: 9)
((a 0) (b 0) (c 0) rest)
(list a b c rest))
=> (1 2 0 (other: 9))
Example:
(define (auth-wrapper proc)
(lambda o
(let-keywords o ((user #f)
(password #f)
rest)
(if (authenticate? user password)
(apply proc rest)
(error "access denied")))))
((auth-wrapper make-payment) 'user: "bob" 'password: "5ecret" 'amount: 50)
ERROR on line 365 of file lib/chibi/doc.scm: immutable binding: auth-wrapper
let* equivalent to let-keywords. Any required
default values are evaluated in left-to-right order, with
all preceding vars in scope.
Example:
(let-keywords* '(b: 5)
((a 1) (b (* a 2)) (c (* b 3)))
(list a b c))
=> (1 5 15)